Model-turned-actress Angie Everhart is heading down the aisle after accepting her boyfriend Carl Ferro's marriage proposal on Tuesday (22Apr14). Everhart, who beat thyroid cancer last year (13), announced her engagement to Ferro, the head of a nutrition company, on Twitter.com, writing, "My man Carl Ferro proposed to me tonight in the exact spot where we had our first kiss! I'm beyond happy!"
The news marks Everhart's fifth engagement, only one of which ended in marriage. She wed singer/actor Ashley Hamilton in 1996, but the union only lasted four months.
Everhart's previous fiances include Hollywood actor Sylvester Stallone, Goodfellas star Joe Pesci and millionaire businessman Jimmy Traboulis.
She has a four-year-old son named Kayden with her ex-boyfriend, actor Chad Stansbury, while Ferro has an eight-year-old daughter from a previous relationship.

Directors, actors and playwrights turned out to laud Meryl Streep as she was presented with a Monte Cristo Award in recognition of her outstanding career at a ceremony in New York City on Monday (21Apr14). The multiple Oscar winner became the 14th recipient of the honour at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center, the stage company where she started her professional career in the 1970s after graduating from Yale University.
Among the speakers who turned out to share their memories of working with Streep were Doubt director John Patrick Shanley, Angels in America playwright Tony Kushner and August: Osage County playwright/screenwriter Tracy Letts.
Streep's The Deer Hunter co-star Joe Grifasi also took to the stage, remembering how the actress had shared her dream to have a husband and four kids during a day at the beach in between shooting the 1978 movie. She went on to wed sculptor Don Gummer and have three daughters and a son.
The Sophie's Choice star concluded the evening by making her own speech, saying, "I feel like I'm at the funeral, so I'm really happy! You usually don't get to be there.
"I just think being an artist is the opportunity to learn all your life, just to soak everything up. Everybody here tonight, I'm gonna use this stuff in the future! And thank you (to Don) for those four children that I dreamed of on the beach that day. He came along, thank God!"
Past recipients include Christopher Plummer, Michael Douglas, James Earl Jones and Kevin Spacey.

Hollywood is serving up blockbuster spectacle in high doses this year, but no film looks as towering and monolithic as Godzilla. The film looks to be the biggest thing hitting cinemas this year, and we're not talking about the measurements of it's Kaiju namesake. Godzilla seems like pure event filmmaking, simply massive in both scope and spectacle. But beyond the enormity of it all, director Gareth Edwards seems keen on not just creating a film about a giant monsters wreaking havoc, but about all the people being trampled out of existence.
If the latest extended look at the film is any indication, Godzilla looks to be a film about humanity. It's a film about pure, ragged, hard fought survival. A film about a species fighting tooth and nail against it's own extinction. The trailer has an overbearing sense of dread that gives the film a more weighty feel than the other tentpole films populating the crowded summer calendar, and the marketing thus far has been very cautious to keep the focus on the people as well as the monsters. In fact, the trailer winds on for a dramatic minute and a half before even showing a glimpse of Godzilla. Instead were treated to a campaign that's focused mainly on the human drama.
Godzilla/YouTube
The trailer opens with an accident at a nuclear plant. We see Sandra Brody (Juliette Binoche) investigating a problem at the plant before a breach occurs and sends a team of scientists running for their lives. Sandra’s husband, Joe (Bryan Cranston) is forced to close a containment door that stops the toxic threat and his wife from reaching the outside world. We see husband and wife staring though a glass window one last time before they’re separated for good. Next we see Brody explaining to his son (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) that he did everything he could to save her.
Beyond the giant Kaiju rampaging through a city, This trailer is about a husband losing his wife, a father begging forgiveness from his son, and people struggling to understand a terror that's looming in the ocean deep. Any film can dazzle with whiz bang special effects, CGI spectacle is cheap commodity these days. It's wildly abundant. It’s story and emotional resonance that seems in short supply, and Godzilla looks to have those in spades. These are real feelings being delivered by actors giving the material its due respect, and really letting us understand the terror that they are facing.
Godzilla/YouTube
Godzilla isn't a movie that will cause you to doze off into your nachos until the next booming set piece flickers on screen. There's something special happening here. The trailer dives into spectacle in the last few seconds, but the actual story and people seem more than just fodder to progress the plot between the action. It looks like we might actually care about the people in this film, and they actually seem just as interesting as the monsters themselves. Let's hope the film delivers on all this promise. It has already delivered on the monster designs, because the updated Godzilla looks all kinds of awesome.
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Rascal Flatts guitarist Joe Don Rooney and his wife Tiffany Fallon are expecting their third child. The country music star and the former Playboy model are preparing to welcome another baby to their brood.
The couple shares its excitement in a statement to People magazine, which reads: "We are so thrilled and feel so blessed to bring another little angel into our world.
"Jagger and Rocky are very excited too. They're going to make a great 'big brother-big sister duo' as the Rooney circus continues."
Rooney and Fallon, who wed in 2006, are already parents to son Jagger Donovan, five, and daughter Raquel Blue, three.

DreamWorks
For the bulk of every Rocky and Bullwinkle episode, moose and squirrel would engage in high concept escapades that satirized geopolitics, contemporary cinema, and the very fabrics of the human condition. With all of that to work with, there's no excuse for why the pair and their Soviet nemeses haven't gotten a decent movie adaptation. But the ingenious Mr. Peabody and his faithful boy Sherman are another story, intercut between Rocky and Bullwinkle segments to teach kids brief history lessons and toss in a nearly lethal dose of puns. Their stories and relationship were much simpler, which means that bringing their shtick to the big screen would entail a lot more invention — always risky when you're dealing with precious material.
For the most part, Mr. Peabody &amp; Sherman handles the regeneration of its heroes aptly, allowing for emotionally substance in their unique father-son relationship and all the difficulties inherent therein. The story is no subtle metaphor for the difficulties surrounding gay adoption, with society decreeing that a dog, no matter how hyper-intelligent, cannot be a suitable father. The central plot has Peabody hosting a party for a disapproving child services agent and the parents of a young girl with whom 7-year-old Sherman had a schoolyard spat, all in order to prove himself a suitable dad. Of course, the WABAC comes into play when the tots take it for a spin, forcing Peabody to rush to their rescue.
Getting down to personals, we also see the left brain-heavy Peabody struggle with being father Sherman deserves. The bulk of the emotional marks are hit as we learn just how much Peabody cares for Sherman, and just how hard it has been to accept that his only family is growing up and changing.
DreamWorks
But more successful than the new is the film's handling of the old — the material that Peabody and Sherman purists will adore. They travel back in time via the WABAC Machine to Ancient Egypt, the Renaissance, and the Trojan War, and 18th Century France, explaining the cultural backdrop and historical significance of the settings and characters they happen upon, all with that irreverent (but no longer racist) flare that the old cartoons enjoyed. And oh... the puns.
Mr. Peabody &amp; Sherman is a f**king treasure trove of some of the most amazingly bad puns in recent cinema. This effort alone will leave you in awe.
The film does unravel in its final act, bringing the science-fiction of time travel a little too close to the forefront and dropping the ball on a good deal of its emotional groundwork. What seemed to be substantial building blocks do not pay off in the way we might, as scholars of animated family cinema, have anticipated, leaving the movie with an unfinished feeling.
But all in all, it's a bright, compassionate, reasonably educational, and occasionally funny if not altogether worthy tribute to an old favorite. And since we don't have our own WABAC machine to return to a time of regularly scheduled Peabody and Sherman cartoons, this will do okay for now.
If nothing else, it's worth your time for the puns.
3/5
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A man who is believed to be Michael Jackson's illegitimate son has tested 99.9 per cent positive as a DNA match to the King of Pop. Brandon Howard, who bares a striking resemblance to a young Michael, is the 31-year-old son of singer Miki Howard, who was managed by the Thriller hitmaker's father Joe Jackson back in the 1980s.
He underwent a paternity test some time ago to prove the Thriller hitmaker was his dad, but reportedly kept the results between himself and a few friends and family members.
FilmOn.com boss Alki David uncovered the scandal and set out to make the information public after obtaining the superstar's DNA from an old dental impression he bought at auction from a Beverly Hills doctor.
He had lab technicians compare the genetics from the orthodontic device to that of Howard's, which he had also discovered, and had the results read out during a livestream on FilmOn.com on Thursday (06Mar14).
Jackson's longtime pal, actor Corey Feldman, was present for the big reveal, as a doctor confirmed, "The probability of parenthood is 99.9 per cent."
Howard was not in attendance at the event and has since posted a video online distancing himself from the whole controversy.
In the footage, the singer, who goes by the name B. Howard, says, "Number one, I did not call TMZ or anything like that, didn't put out a story, nothing. Number two, I have never self-proclaimed to be Michael Jackson's son. Number three, I am definitely not suing the (Jackson) estate, I've been taken care of very well, and also I make my own cash.
"Number four, it is true I did a DNA test but it had nothing to do with any of this, I swear on my life..."
Meanwhile, Feldman has defended Howard in a series of posts on his Twitter.com blog, in which he suggests he was aware of Howard's existence all along.
In messages posted before the DNA results were announced, he wrote, "PLEASE UNDERSTAND: (Howard) didn't talk 2 (sic) the press! He never asked 4 (sic) $ (money)! And he has STILL NOT CLAIMED he is MJs kid (sic)!
"SOME SLEEZBALL FOUND OUT ABOUT THE TEST AND MADE UP A STORY AND SOLD IT 2 (sic) TMZ! That's the WHOLE STORY!!! It was meant 2 B (sic)PRIVATE INFO!"
Jackson died in 2009.

The gloves Muhammad Ali wore for his six-round thriller against Sonny Liston in 1964 have sold at auction for $837,000 (£523,100), The Heritage Auction in New York took place almost 50 years to the day after Ali, then known as Cassius Clay, stood up to Liston in Florida.
The signed gloves were expected to go under the hammer for $500,000 (£312,000).
A Heritage Auctions spokesman tells The Bleacher Report, "These are the very gloves that Ali wore when he claimed his first heavyweight championship 50 years ago and, given the attention these received from media and fans all over the world, and the spectacular price they achieved, it's clear that Ali is just as loved and respected today as he's ever been."
The gloves belonged to the estate of Ali's legendary trainer Angelo Dundee, who died in 2012.
Dundee's son parted with various items of boxing memorabilia to help the family cover Dundee's medical bills and funeral costs.
Among the other highlights at the sports memorabilia auction: a World Series pocket watch belonging to Babe Ruth, which went under the hammer for $717,000 (£448,000), and 'Shoeless' Joe Jackson's used baseball bat, which fetched $956,000 (£598,000).

Rock veteran Glenn Hughes and one-time Led Zeppelin drummer Jason Bonham have reteamed to form a new supergroup, called California Breed. The two rockers previously worked together in Black Country Communion with guitarist Joe Bonamassa, but when that group disbanded in 2012, the former Deep Purple star and Bonham, the son of late Led Zep musician John Bonham, pledged to work together again.
Now, they've teamed up with 23-year-old newcomer Andrew Watt, who Bonham has dubbed a "white Jimi Hendrix", for their latest venture.
The trio is working on a debut album, which is tentatively scheduled for release in May (14).

There was a lot of hand-wringing by Star Wars fans when George Lucas sold his company to Disney. The entertainment conglomerate has long been seen as being more interested in profits than integrity. Those fears haven't entirely subsided, but all it took was two little words to engage a significant chunk of that fan base in a discussion that drew attention away from whatever else Disney might do: Boba Fett.
While the casual fans have followed the various reports of who might be part of J.J. Abrams' Episode VII and whether that film will focus on the children of Luke Skywalker and/or Princess Leia and Han Solo, the hardcore fans lit up at the suggestion of a standalone film for the mysterious bounty hunter who first appeared in The Empire Strikes Back.
Why so much excitement over a secondary character in the Star Wars universe? The truth is that there has always been a clamoring for information about Boba Fett, starting right from the beginning. After the original Star Wars was released and before Empire came out, the first new character that most fans learned about was Fett. He was the first to have a toy action figure, even before the release of the movie, and the fact that he was a bounty hunter going after Han Solo was a well-known plot point of the sequel before it even began filming. With little else to work from, Fett gave fans in the late '70s a focus to imagine what was coming next. And, with that, the cult of Boba Fett was born.
There are books and websites devoted to the exploits of the bounty hunter — he even has his own fan club — yet he was on screen in the films for less time than Jar Jar Binks and a number of Ewoks. There's been more time devoted to figuring out his backstory than almost any character, save Darth Vader. Hardcore fans know that at one point it was rumored that Vader and Fett were brothers, before the prequels revealed a different origin story for both. (Boba Fett is the cloned son of bounty hunter Jango Fett, as revealed in Attack of the Clones.)
Fans have long complained about his seeming demise in Return of the Jedi, leading Lucas to admit that he might have done it differently if he had realized the character was that popular. Now attention has turned to what will happen if his standalone adventure makes it to the big screen.
Rumors are flying that screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan, the scribe behind Empire and Jedi, will handle the script but with a focus on reworking the character to distance him from the origin given in the prequels. Equally rumored is that Joe Johnston, who directed Captain America: The First Avenger and helped design Fett as a Lucas employee, has told people that he would like to direct.
Of course, in keeping with the mysterious nature of the character, no one is certain about anything, including whether a movie will actually be made. What is a sure bet, however, is Boba Fett's legion of admirers will keep watching, waiting and debating for longer than it would've taken the bounty hunter to be digested by his sarlacc nemesis from Jedi (that's 1,000 years to the uninitiated).
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Fox Broadcasting Co.
It's nice that Family Guy has Brian back. But one of his least likeable qualities is his insistence that he's a damn writer. Really, Family Guy, it's infuriating to anybody who has authored a screenplay, written a book or produced a byline. We see Brian at "work" at the beginning of the episode. Brian's writing is lazy and halfhearted.
And it gets rewarded in him getting a job on a TV show. He finds out that his son, Dylan Flannigan (a human who has no dog qualities whatsoever), stars on a Disney TV show called Parent Boppers. Brian schmoozes his way to a job on the writing staff. While there, he suggests insane ideas which eventually get him fired. Why couldn't he just bask in the nepotism? No, he had to try to grow a brain. Good one, Brian.
Peter, Quagmire and Joe's friendship gets tested after Peter foolishly shoots Quagmire in the arm. Joe must choose which friend to side with. The right choice is Quagmire – Joe doesn't want to hang with the mentally unstable fat man. Peter becomes desperate for companionship so he offers to let Quagmire shoot him in the arm. Bullet for a bullet, right? Joe shoots Peter in the arm because Peter and Quagmire can't even figure out how to do that correctly. Quagmire still seeks justice and he gets it: he takes a shot at Peter's head.
Brian is so distraught at losing his job (and his son's trust) that he turns to Rite Aid brand whiskey. What happened, Ralph's brand beer wasn't around? Stewie helps convey a message to Dylan, who still bears no canine features, that Brian is sorry. The diabolical baby gets an acting gig on the show to deliver the message, which ends in Brian and Dylan hugging it out. Aw. Oh, Peter ends up with a massive bandage and some seriously slurred speech thanks to the gunshot wound.
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